A group of German hackers claimed to have cracked the iPhone fingerprint scanner on Sunday, just two days after Apple launched the technology that it promises will better protect devices from criminals and snoopers seeking access. . If the claim is verified, it will be embarrassing for Apple which is betting on the scanner to set its smartphone apart from new Samsung models and others running the Android operating system of Google. The link for this article located at NBC News is no longer available. . Concerns are growing as reports emerge that a group of German cybersecurity experts has managed to undermine the fingerprint recognition system of the iPhone 5S. iPhone Security,Fingerprint Scam,Cybersecurity Breach,Mobile Threats,Cyber Attack. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Updated WikiLeaks has denied that eavesdropping on Chinese hackers played a key part in the early days of the whistle-blowing site. Wired reports that early WikiLeaks documents were siphoned off from Chinese hackers' activities via a node on the Tor anonymiser network, as an extensive interview with WikiLeaks' founder Julian Paul Assange by the New Yorker explains in greater depth.. One of the WikiLeaks activists owned a server that was being used as a node for the Tor network. Millions of secret transmissions passed through it. The activist noticed that hackers from China were using the network to gather foreign governments The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . One of the WikiLeaks activists owned a server that was being used as a node for the Tor network. Mil. updated, wikileaks, denied, eavesdropping, chinese, hackers, played, early. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A group of UK hackers claims to have captured confidential banking information on the wanted terrorist Osama bin Laden, and Al Qaeda, the organisation he heads up. According to 27-year-old millionaire Kim Schmitz, otherwise known as convicted hacker "Kimble", the group . . . . A group of UK hackers claims to have captured confidential banking information on the wanted terrorist Osama bin Laden, and Al Qaeda, the organisation he heads up. According to 27-year-old millionaire Kim Schmitz, otherwise known as convicted hacker "Kimble", the group broke into systems at the AlShamal Islamic Bank to obtain the data. The attack apparently happened after a $10m reward offered up by Schmitz, was answered by an unidentified member of the Islamic banking community who pinpointed the AlShamal bank as the host for bin Laden's accounts. Schmitz posted the reward offer along with a letter to the governments of the world, urging them to band together to "fight terror!" The link for this article located at VNUnet is no longer available. . A group of UK hackers claims to have captured confidential banking information on the wanted terrori. group, hackers, claims, captured, confidential, banking, information, wanted, terrori. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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